cont’d
It isn’t the rite of baptism that saves it is the “appeal to God for a good conscience”.
Which occurs in the rite of Baptism. If that appeal does not occur in the rite of Baptism because the individual does not have faith in the action of God, then it will not be done.
In other words, no one can come around and make up their own ritual and command God to do what he wants. God has given us the rites that He wants us to perform
in His Son’s name.
In other words it is what happens to our heart/conscience that actually saves us.
It is God who saves by performing these actions, which He commanded us to invoke
by washing in water and calling on His name.
The elders at the local assembly would also have understood baptism in much of the New Testament to be talking about being plunged into Christ, overwhelmed by Christ, immersed in Christ or united to Christ as opposed to the rite of water Baptism.
On the contrary, the early Church Fathers all taught water baptism.
And when the letters from Paul were read to the congregation they would have understood the same thing.
Still, not true. The earliest homilies of the Early Church Fathers speak of the Holy
Spirit in the waters of Baptism.
JUSTIN MARTYR
“As many as are persuaded and believe that what we [Christians] teach and say is true, and undertake to be able to live accordingly . . . are brought by us where there is water, and are regenerated in the same manner in which we were ourselves regenerated. For, in the name of God, the Father and Lord of the universe, and of our Savior Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Spirit, they then receive the washing with water. For Christ also said, ‘Except you be born again, you shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven’ [John 3:3]” (First Apology 61 [A.D. 151]).
TERTULLIAN
“Happy is our sacrament of water, in that, by washing away the sins of our early blindness, we are set free and admitted into eternal life. . . . [But] a viper of the [Gnostic] Cainite heresy, lately conversant in this quarter, has carried away a great number with her most venomous doctrine, making it her first aim to destroy baptism—which is quite in accordance with nature, for vipers and.asps . . . themselves generally do live in arid and waterless places. But we, little fishes after the example of our [Great] Fish, Jesus Christ, are born in water, nor have we safety in any other way than by permanently abiding in water. So that most monstrous creature, who had no right to teach even sound doctrine, knew full well how to kill the little fishes—by taking them away from the water!” (Baptism 1 [A.D. 203]).
Do you have any examples of an early Church Father who says that water baptism is
not necessary for salvation?